The Courtship of Miles Standish is set in the year 1621 against the backdrop of a fierce Indian war and focuses on a love triangle among three Mayflower passengers: Miles Standish, Priscilla Mullins, and John Alden. Longfellow claimed the story was rooted in family tradition, yet there is a complete absence of historical evidence to support its major elements.
Fictionalized history
A debate persists as to whether the tale is fact or fiction. Main characters Miles Standish, John Alden, and Priscilla Mullins are based upon real Mayflower passengers. Longfellow was a descendant of John Alden and Priscilla Mullins through his mother Zilpah Wadsworth.[1] Skeptics dismiss his narrative as a folktale. At minimum, Longfellow used poetic license, condensing several years of events. Scholars have confirmed the cherished place of romantic love in Pilgrim culture,[2] and have documented the Indian war described by Longfellow.[3] Miles Standish and John Alden were likely roommates in Plymouth;[4] Priscilla Mullins was the only single woman of marriageable age in the young colony at that time and did in fact marry Alden.[3] Standish's first wife, Rose Handley, died aboard the Mayflower in January 1621.[5] Two years later, Standish married a woman named Barbara in Plymouth in 1623. The Standish and Alden families both moved from Plymouth to adjacent Duxbury, Massachusetts in the late 1620s, where they lived in close proximity, intermarried, and remained close for several generations.[6] Upon his death in 1656, Standish's widow, Barbara, appointed John Alden to take inventory of Standish's estate.[7]
Composition and publication history
The first reference to the poem recorded in Longfellow's journal is dated December 29, 1857, where the project is referred to as "Priscilla". By March 1 the next year, it was renamed The Courtship of Miles Standish.[8]: 88
The ballad was very popular in nineteenth-century America. It was published in book form on October 16, 1858,[8]: 89 and it sold 25,000 copies after two months.[9] Reportedly, 10,000 copies were sold in London in a single day.[10]
Standish is memorialized in a low relief sculpture of six characters from Longfellow's epic poems executed by Daniel Chester French and installed at Longfellow Park, in Cambridge, Massachusetts, located in front of Longfellow's former home, now a U.S. National Historic Site maintained by the National Park Service.[11][12]
Subject of a radio play called 'The Courtship of Miles Standish.' It was broadcast on November 23, 1949 on Family Theater on the Mutual Broadcasting System, episode 145.